I saw this mentioned in a book I recently read, but not sure which one. What is a "Lead Scale". Is it just following down the neck to the body in a scale pattern? Would this be like using the same notes found in a particular scale, but instead of playing low e through high E on about 4 frets, is it more left to right, like covering the E and B strings towards the body from the middle of the neck?

Roy

"I wonder if a composer ever intentionally composed a piece that was physically impossible to play and stuck it away to be found years later after his death, knowing it would forever drive perfectionist musicians crazy." - George Carlin

I'm more than willing to be wrong on this one, Roy, but I suspect that the use of "lead scale" is simply someone trying to come up with a name for moving a scale through different positions on the fretboard and only using certain strings to do so.

For instance, play an A major scale. Chances are you either used an open position:

All the A major scale, right? Well, someone might decide to call the last version a horizontal scale because it's all done on one string. Does that make a difference? Not really but it could be helpful in that particular book if the term is being used to clarify other scales and methods further on.

Writers sometimes come up with terms to distinguish their material from others (and that's understandable since so much of the same material has to be covered). "Lead scale," like "horizontal scale" sound very much like guitarist's terms, though. Imagine telling a saxophone player to play a horizontal scale!

Is this what's happening when some fancy-dancy lead playing os going on and they start mid-neck and go down to the body? On minute they're doing some rocking up at the 5th and the next thing you know, they're doing this high screech lead down near the body. All of those notes are part of the Am minor pent scale. Maybe even throw in some D-sharps in there for the Blues scale.

Roy

"I wonder if a composer ever intentionally composed a piece that was physically impossible to play and stuck it away to be found years later after his death, knowing it would forever drive perfectionist musicians crazy." - George Carlin

Well, I've never heard it called Lead Scales before but I think you're on the right track working with Am Pent. A good Majority of Rock music is in the Key of A, and pent is the right scale to use if we're playing rock,

Don't forgo working on string bending and vibrato. Man, I struggled for years trying to play lead, half a dozen teachers and twenty books never explained that if you want to wail on the guitar, you gotta learn how to bend the damn strings. There's lots a good youtubes out there to help you out.

I employed a bit of the "scale" i posted earlier in attempts to go up and down the neck while remaining in key. (right term?) Some of it works and some of it doesn't. I'm still getting used to the playing the right notes at the right time part of the whole progression thing, so this is failing as an extension of that at times.

Gotdablues wrote:Don't forgo working on string bending and vibrato.

I don't do enough slides, double-stops, hammer-ons and hammer-offs. I do plenty of bends and am coming up to speed with Vibrato. I always think that when I do Vibrato that I go over board. When I record and listen to it afterwards, it generally sounds better than what I thought when playing it.

Quite the opposite of my note selection. I'll play that back and wince at least once every 10 seconds.

Roy

"I wonder if a composer ever intentionally composed a piece that was physically impossible to play and stuck it away to be found years later after his death, knowing it would forever drive perfectionist musicians crazy." - George Carlin

I too suspect that this is just some clever marketing term given to a typical pentatonic scale or major scale for the purposes of playing "lead". That's the first thing that would come to mind when I think lead scale. Maybe one that goes diagonally even.